Thomas P. Dockendorff Collection Relating to the Parkinson and Dockendorff Architectural Firm


Summary Information
Title: Thomas P. Dockendorff Collection Relating to the Parkinson and Dockendorff Architectural Firm
Date: 1981-1997

Creator:
  • Dockendorff, Thomas P.
Unique Identifier: MSS 127

Quantity: 1.2 cubic feet

Physical Description: 2 archives boxes, 1 card box

Repository:
La Crosse Public Library
Contact Information

Archival Location:
La Crosse Public Library (Map)

Abstract:
Thomas P. Dockendorff is an Emeritus Professor of Geography at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota and has an interest in the La Crosse, Wisconsin, architectural firm of Parkinson and Dockendorff. Bernard Dockendorff and English-born Albert E. Parkinson designed many of the most significant surviving Early Modern (1900-1940) commercial and public buildings in La Crosse, Wis., under the aegis of Parkinson and Dockendorff Architects including many school buildings, Catholic churches, commercial structures, and residences.

This collection consists of the research materials created and gathered by Thomas P. Dockendorf regarding the architectural legacy of Parkinson & Dockendorff in Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota, with the majority of documented structures in Wisconsin in the La Crosse, Wis., area. The collection is divided into two series of descriptive information labeled Subject Files (which includes indices of Parkinson and Dockendorff designed buildings, and correspondence, papers and research material of Thomas P. Dockendorff concerning Parkinson and Dockendorff), and Visual Materials (which include 4” x 6 “ prints and 35 mm color slides of known Parkinson & Dockendorff designed buildings taken during the period 1990-1997). The collection does not include architectural drawings of the firm.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.lcpl-mss127
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Acquisitions Information

(Accession no. 2005.065) Donated by Thomas P. Dockendorff, 2005

Access to Materials

Materials in this collection are available for patron use.

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], Thomas P. Dockendorff Collection Relating to the Parkinson and Dockendorff Architectural Firm, MSS 127, La Crosse Public Library Archives, La Crosse, WI

Processing Information

Processed by Sloan Komissarov, 2010-2011

Arrangement

Arranged in two series:

Series 1: Subject Files

Series 2: Visual Materials

Scope and Contents

This collection consists of the research materials related to the architectural legacy of Parkinson and Dockendorff gathered between 1981 and 1997 by Thomas P. Dockendorff, Emeritus Professor of Geography in the College of Social Sciences at St. Cloud State University in St. Cloud, Minnesota.

The materials include descriptive information (labeled subject files), and visual materials regarding structures in Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota, with the majority of documented structures in Wisconsin in the La Crosse area. The collection does not include architectural drawings of the firm.

Biographical Note

Bernard Dockendorff (b. January 22, 1878, d. September 23, 1952), a La Crosse native, was the son of Bernard J. and Elizabeth Hoeschler Dockendorff. He attended St. Joseph's Cathedral School and secondary school at La Crosse High School, after which he worked for two years (c. 1895-1897) with the local architectural firm of Stolze and Schick before leaving in 1897 to study architecture at the Polytechnic Institute, University of Darmstadt, Germany. He worked for two years with Ludwig Becker, a cathedral architect in Mainz, Germany. Returning to La Crosse around 1902, he formed a partnership with Albert Parkinson, which lasted until their deaths in 1952.(1) A. E. Parkinson (b. February 17, 1870, d. September 21, 1952), a native of England was trained in the practices of architecture by his father and the schools of Scranton. He worked as an engineer and contractor in Sparta, Wisconsin, shortly before forming the architectural firm with Dockendorff.

Licensed to practice in Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota, and Illinois, the Parkinson and Dockendorff offices located in the Linker Building in downtown La Crosse provided practical training for several young area architects including Otto Merman, associated with Percy D. Bentley and later Herbert W. Skogstad, and Robert Cerney, who later became an architect in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota. Credited with the design of over 800 public buildings, the firm‟s commissions included schools, residences, hospitals, commercial structures and civic buildings.

Thomas Dockendorff described the architectural firm as existing from 1902-1952. “[Parkinson and Dockendorff] were commissioned to design approximately 150 schools and/or additions. Three distinct periods of design may be classified from their work. The early period, 1902-1912, is the classic Georgian style with pyramidal roof, dormer windows, and centrally placed cupola. The principle period, 1912-1930, is characterized by the "academic" or "collegiate" Gothic style with multi-stories of reddish brick and Bedford limestone trim. The third style occurred during the Depression and World War II period and is denoted by a lack of ornamentation, the use of yellow brick, and fewer commissions.” Dockendorff contended that “the influence of one architectural firm upon the design of so many structures had a significant impact of the perception of how schools should look.”

Parkinson and Dockendorff are responsible for the design of four of the school buildings in the city of La Crosse, including the Holy Trinity Catholic Church (built in 1907) on 1417 South 13th Street, the Aquinas Catholic High School on 11th Street, the Blessed Sacrament School (built in 1938), and the physical education building, known as Wittich Hall, at the La Crosse Normal School at 1724 State Street, in 1930.(2)

Following the deaths of Parkinson and Dockendorff, their drawings and supplies were given to another La Crosse architectural firm, Schubert, Boyum and Sorenson, and subsequently to Kratt & Associates Architects.

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Sources:

(1) “Dockendorff, Architect Here 46 Years, Dies,” La Crosse Tribune (September 1952). (2) Architectural Researches, Inc., City of La Crosse, Wisconsin Architectural and Historical Intensive Survey Report (1996), 225-226.

Related Materials
(MSS 061)
Parkinson and Dockendorff Architectural Drawings
Subject Terms
  • Parkinson and Dockendorff Architects.
  • Architects--Wisconsin--La Crosse
  • Architecture--Wisconsin--La Crosse
Contents List
(Series 1)
Series: Subject Files
Scope and Contents

Subject Files include indices of Parkinson and Dockendorff designed buildings, and correspondence, papers and research material of Thomas P. Dockendorff concerning Parkinson and Dockendorff.

Box 1
  Folder 9
Architecture Consultants Seminar keynote address, 1995
Box 1
  Folder 7
Association of American Geographers (AAG) annual meeting poster submission, 1992
Box 1
  Folder 8
AAG West Lakes Division annual meeting, 1993
Box 1
  Folder 10
"Breaking New Ground on Old Buildings" paper, 1994-1996
Box 1
  Folder 6
Brochures (by city), 1981-1989
Box 1
  Folder 3
Building indicies
Box 1
  Folder 4
Clippings (by city)
Box 1
  Folder 11
Correspondence, 1990-1997
Box 1
  Folder 5
Twenty-Five Years of School House Planning, 1902-1927, by Paul F. Neverman
(Series 2)
Series: Visual Materials
Scope and Contents

Visual Materials include 4” x 6 “ prints and 35 mm color slides of known Parkinson & Dockendorff designed buildings taken during the period 1990-1997.

Box 3
Architectural photos (by city)
Box 1
  Folder 2
Negatives
Box 1
  Folder 1
Photographs and elevations (by city)
Slides (by building type), 1990-1997
Box 2
  Folder 1
Churches
Box 2
  Folder 2
Churches, businesses
Box 2
  Folder 3
Hospitals, civic buildings
Box 2
  Folder 4
Residences, schools
Box 2
  Folder 5-6
Schools,
Box 2
  Folder 7
Schools, architecture firm
Box 2
  Folder 8-9
Maps